Abstract

We demonstrate the existence of polymorphic DNA minisatellites in Drosophila mauritiana, a close relative of D. melanogaster. One of these sequences (minisatellite mD4.2) consists of 13 tandemly repeated monomers, 10 of which are 33 base pairs long. Each of the repeat monomers contains sequences identical or very similar to the Chi sequence (GCTGGTGG), a signal for recBCD-dependent recombination in Escherichia coli. Sequences hybridizing to the mD4.2 minisatellite are present in at least 20–25 genomic locations and exhibit substantial variability among different populations of three Drosophila species and two populations of the house fly, Musca domestica. Interpopulational variation is a result of length differences rather than restriction site polymorphisms and genetic crosses establish that the hybridizing restriction fragment patterns have an underlying genetic basis. The presence of these sequences in the genetically well known Drosophila species allows critical examination of processes that produce and maintain the remarkable variability associated with these genomic regions.

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